David dayenport



@uitrit gisten identit @ffice DAVID DAVENPORT, OF ALBANY, NEW YORK, ASSIGNOR TO HENRY C. WILKINS, OF THE SAME PLACE.V

Letters Patent No.'67,848, dated August 20, 1867.

CORN-CANDY GUTTER.

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Be it known that I, DAVID DAVENPORT, of the city of Albany, State of New York, have invented a new` and useful Machine for Service inthe Manufacture of Corn-Candy Cakes; and I do declare the following specificaton, with the drawings forming part thereof, to be a fulland complete description of 'my invention.

Figure 1 is a perspective view of the machine.

Figure 2'is a. central vertical section of the same.

Figure 3 is a perspective view of' the-cutter.

Similar letters denote the same parts of the apparatus.

The machine is constructed of two upright posts, A A, connected at top by a cross-beam,131, and resting at bottom upon two feet, C C. Between the posts A a cross-beam, D, is secured to them. At a short dis# tance above D there is another beam, E, movablel upwards and downwards between the posts.` Attached to the lower side of this beam there is a cutter, consisting of a. set of knives, K, shaped and arranged asshown in fig. 3, which represents them in perspective, turned in reverse obliquely upwards four ranging from the front to rear parallel with each other, and divided through their centre by a blade stretching across the machine and extending beyond the outermost of the other blades, so as to divide anything subjected to them into'ten sections, of equal size.v These cutters are attached to a block, Gr, tting into the beam so as to be easily removedl when desired. y Y

` The object of this cutter is to divide a mass i corn candy into cakes of a given size. The candy, which is formed into thin slabs by shallow rectangular pans,.is `placed under the Acutter within a -recess or box, a, on

the top of the beam D, its sides .being formed by blocks supporting, ata' distance equal to the thickness of the candy, a metal plate, b, pierced with-slots to allow the passage of the blades of the cutter. The beam E, with the cutter, is. kept raised above the plate by' springs S S, placed ontbe top of the beam B, andconnected with it by rods R R, o r may be operated by any other convenient arrangement of springs. From the lower side ofA the beam, rods J J connect it with a treadle, T, attached to the base of the frame, by means, of which beam E can be drawn downwards. M is a sloping table, upon which the cakes are projected when completed.

The operation of the machine is this: The operator places the candy slab within the recess a., and then by a. smart pressure upon the treadle brings the cutter down through the mass, severing it into ten cakes.

I do not `limit myself to the division into ten cakes, but propose to make the cutter with any number of knives and any arrangement of them to cut into any required number of cakes of any desired size or form, and to make the recess a below it to receive any corresponding` size of slab of candy.

VWhat I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by'Letters Patent, is-

I claim the traversing-block E, carrying the knives K K, crossing'cach other and operated by the spring S S and vtreadle T, to cut the cakes of candy entirelyacross in each direction at one operation. i

The combination of the subject-matter ofthe above claim with the slotted plate b and the recess a beneath it, as described.

D. DAVENPORT.

Witnesses:

R1cnD.'VAnIcK DE WITT, D. W. DE WITT. 

